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EVOLUTION BY TUMOR NEOFUNCTIONALIZATION AND PHENOMENON
OF CARCINO-EVO-DEVO GENES
A.P.Kozlov
Biomedical Center and St.Petersburg Polytechnic University, St. Petersburg, Russia
Earlier I formulated the hypothesis of the possible evolutionary role of tumors. This
hypothesis suggests that tumors supply evolving multicellular organisms with extra cell
masses for the expression of newly evolving genes. After expression of novel genes in
tumor cells, tumors differentiate in new directions and give rise to new cell types,
tissues and organs.
In the presentation, the bulk of data supporting the positive evolutionary role of tumors
will be reviewed, obtained both in the lab of the author and from the literature sources.
The following issues will be addressed: the widespread occurrence of tumors in
multicellular organisms; features of tumors that could be used in evolution; the
relationship of tumors to evo-devo; examples of recapitulation of some tumor features
in recently evolved organs; the types of tumors that might play the role in evolution;
examples of tumors that have played the role in evolution.
The discussion of experimental confirmation of nontrivial predictions of the hypothesis
will include the analysis of evolutionary novelty of tumor-specifically expressed EST
sequences; ELFNI – AS1, a human gene with possible microRNA function expressed
predominantly in tumors and originated in primates; PBOV1, a human gene of the
recent de novo origin with predicted highly tumor-specific expression profile; and the
evolutionary novelty of human cancer/testis antigen genes.
The conclusion is made that expression of protogenes, evolutionarily young and/or
novel genes in tumors might be a new biological phenomenon, a phenomenon of
carcino-evo-devo genes, predicted by the hypothesis of evolution by tumor
neofunctionalization.